NAME

SYNOPSIS

SYNTAX

Variable parameters are shown in emphasis: argument
All other characters shown are required verbatim. Whitespace is only
required to delimit words, but it is fine to add more whitespace.

DESCRIPTION

There are two types of menus in fluxbox which can be configured.
The first is the root menu, which normally appears when you right-click
on the desktop.
The first is the ROOTMENU (Or right-click menu), is usually bound to a
right-click on the desktop, though this binding can be changed in the
'keys' file (fluxbox-keys(5)). This same syntax is used for the
CustomMenu command, also mentioned in fluxbox-keys(5).
Fluxbox installs a default root menu file in /usr/share/fluxbox/menu.
You can also use fluxbox -i to confirm this location. Of course this
system-wide menu can be customized for all users at once, but it is
also possible to create an individual menu file for each user. By
convention, users create a menu file in ~/.fluxbox/menu. Once you've
created your own menu file, you'll want to make sure that you properly
declare this location in your 'init' file so that fluxbox knows where
to look. See RESOURCES, below for details.
The second type is the WINDOWMENU, which defines the contents of the
menu which appears when you right-click on a window's titlebar or
iconbar. This opens a menu file as defined by ~/.fluxbox/windowmenu. If
this file does not exist, fluxbox will copy in the default from
/usr/share/fluxbox/windowmenu.
You do not need to "reload" fluxbox after editing the apps file, the
changes should be taken into account the next time you open the menu.

ROOTMENU

The root menu must begin with a [begin] tag and end with an [end] tag,
and every tag must be on its own line.
There are up to four fields in a menu line. They are of the form
[tag] (label) {command} <'icon'>
The <'icon'> field is always optional when shown below. If specified,
the icon will be scaled down and displayed in the menu alongside the
text label of the item. It must be in .xpm or .png format.
Any line that starts with a # or ! is considered a comment and ignored
by fluxbox. Also, in the label/command/filename fields you can escape
any character. Using \\ inserts a literal back-slash into the
label/command/filename field.
You may enter labels, commands, and icons using characters from any
iconv(1) language/locale by specifying the encoding used via the
[encoding] tag, detailed below.
StructuralTags[begin] (title)
This tells fluxbox to start parsing the menu file. This tag is
required for fluxbox to read your menu file. If it cannot find it,
the system default menu is used in its place. The title appears at
the top of the menu. And [end] tag is required to end the menu.
[submenu] (label) {title} <'icon'>
This tells fluxbox to create and parse a new menu, which is
inserted as a submenu into the parent menu. These menus are parsed
recursively, so there is no limit to the number of levels or nested
submenus you can have. The label is the text that will appear in
the parent menu, and the title is shown at the top of the submenu.
If omitted, the title will be the same as the label. An [end] tag
is required to end the submenu.
[end]
This tells fluxbox that it is at the end of a menu. This can either
be a [submenu] or the [begin] tag of the main root menu. There must
be at least one of these tags in your menu to correspond to the
required [begin] tag, and one for each [submenu].
[encoding] {encoding}
This begins an [encoding] section and specifies the string encoding
of all strings until the matching [endencoding] tag. For a list of
available encodings on your system, run iconv-l.
[endencoding]
This ends an [encoding] section.
[include] (path)
Parses the file specified by filename inline with the current menu.
The path can be the full path to a file or it can begin with ~/,
which will be expanded into your home directory. If path is a
directory, then all files in that directory are included.
[separator]
This will create a nice separation line. Useful for splitting up
sections in a "pretty" way. The optional comment is not displayed,
but can be useful for internal documentation or script parsing of
menu files.
[nop] (label) <'icon'>
Insert a non-operational item into the current menu. This is much
like [separator], but instead of a line, it inserts a label. This
can be used to help format the menu into blocks or sections if so
desired. The label is optional, and if omitted a blank item will be
inserted.
Applications[exec] (label) {command...} <'icon'>
Inserts a command item into the menu. When you select the menu item
from the menu, fluxbox runs command... in your $SHELL (or /bin/sh
if $SHELL is not set). You can use this to launch applications, run
shell scripts, etc. Since all arguments are passed verbatim to the
shell, you can use environment variables, pipes, or anything else
the shell can do. Note that processes only see environment
variables that were set before fluxbox started (such as in
~/.fluxbox/startup).
FluxboxFunctions[config] (label) <'icon'>
Inserts a fluxbox native submenu item, containing numerous
configuration options concerning window placement, focus style,
window moving style, etc. See ConfigurationMenu in fluxbox(1) for
details.
[reconfig] (label) <'icon'>
When selected this item re-reads the current style and menu files
and applies any changes. This is useful for creating a new style or
theme, as you don't have to constantly restart fluxbox every time
you save your style. However, fluxbox automatically rereads the
menu whenever it changes.
[restart] (label) {command} <'icon'>
This tells fluxbox to restart. If command is supplied, it shuts
down and runs the command (which is commonly the name of another
window manager). If command is omitted, fluxbox restarts itself.
[exit] (label) <'icon'>
Inserts an item that shuts down and exits fluxbox. Any open windows
are reparented to the root window before fluxbox exits.
[style] (label) {filename} <'icon'>
This tells fluxbox to insert an item that, when selected, reads
style file named filename and apply the new textures, colors and
fonts to the current running session.
[stylesmenu] (directory) <'icon'>
Reads all filenames from the specified directory, assuming that
they are all valid style files, and creates inline menu items in
the current menu for every filename, that, when selected by the
user will apply the selected style file to the current session. The
labels that are created in the menu are the filenames of the style
files.
[stylesdir] (label) {directory} <'icon'>
Creates a submenu entry with label (that is also the title of the
new submenu), and inserts in that submenu all filenames in the
specified directory, assuming that they are all valid style files
(directories are ignored) in the same way as the [stylesdir]
command does. Both [stylesdir] and [stylesmenu] commands make it
possible to install style files without editing your init file.
[wallpapers] (directory) {command} <'icon'>
This inserts a menu item to set the wallpaper for each file in the
given directory. The command is optional, and defaults to fbsetbg.
[workspaces] (label) <'icon'>
This tells fluxbox to insert a link to the workspaces menu directly
into your menu. See WorkspaceMenu in fluxbox(1) for details.
[command] (label) <'icon'>
In addition to the commands above, any legal keys file command may
be used as a menu item. See fluxbox-keys(5) for more information.

WINDOWMENU

Like the ROOTMENU, this menu file must start with [begin] and end with
[end]. However, this file consists of only one [tag] per line with no
labels, commands, or icons.
The available tags in this menu are:
[shade]
Provides a menu item to shade or unshade (or, roll-up) the window.
This is equivalent to the shade titlebar button.
[stick]
Provides a menu item to stick or unstick the window. Stuck windows
are displayed on all workspaces. This is equivalent to the stick
titlebar button.
[maximize]
Provides a menu item to maximize or unmaximize the window,
equivalent to the maximize titlebar button. The button with which
you click alters the behaviour of this item as follows:
o Button 1 (Un)Maximize as normal.
o Button 2 (Un)Maximize window vertically.
o Button 3 (Un)Maximize window horizontally.
[iconify]
Provides a menu item to iconify (or, minimize) the window,
equivalent to the iconify titlebar button.
[close]
Closes the window gracefully, equivalent to the titlebar button.
[kill]
Kills the window's process, like xkill(1).
[raise]
Raise the window to the top of the stack within its layer.
[lower]
Lower the window to the bottom of the stack within its layer.
[settitledialog]
Opens a dialog which can be used to set the window's title. Some
applications may re-set their own title from time-to-time, wiping
out your setting.
[sendto]
Sends the window to a different workspace. When you select the
workspace with a middle-click, fluxbox will also change to the new
workspace. A regular click only sends the window.
[layer]
Adds a "Layer..." submenu which lets you change the layer of this
window.
[alpha]
Adds a "Transparency..." submenu which lets you change the focused
and unfocused transparency of this window.
[extramenus]
Adds the "Remember..." menu item, which allows you to specify which
settings should be stored in the 'apps' file (See fluxbox-apps(5)
for more details).
[separator]
Adds a horizontal line to the menu

FILES

~/.fluxbox/menu
This is the default location for the user's root menu.
/usr/share/fluxbox/menu
This is the system-wide root menu file. It will be used if the
user's root menu is missing or unparseable.
~/.fluxbox/windowmenu
This is the user's window menu definition file
/usr/share/fluxbox/menu
This is the default window menu. If the user does not have this
file, it will be copied to ~/.fluxbox/windowmenu on fluxbox
startup.

RESOURCES

session.menuFile:location
This may be set to override the location of the user's root menu.

ENVIRONMENT

The comand... field of the [exec] tag can take advantage of other
environment variables if they are set before fluxbox is started.